Kim Jong - un's regime claims it has successfully tested a miniaturised H - bomb, which brings up concerns that the country might be getting closer to acquiring the technology to
make warheads small enough to fit into ballistic missiles.
Not exact matches
He concluded that the many dives, loops and curls of the interceptors resulted in diverse angles of attack that
made it nearly impossible to destroy enemy
warheads.
In today's paper, in a paragraph near the very end of the story, is a mention of how much money Ratner stands to
make from Atlantic Yards — a figure the developer has hidden as zealously as the code to a nuclear
warhead.
In a speech in March, the prime minister said the government would try to
make further cuts to its nuclear
warheads, which had been halved since 1997, as part of global deals.
The exact
make - up of the foil is kept secret from the inspectors, so they can't work out what's inside the
warhead.
He worries that taking too many measurements could reveal what the foil is
made of, letting inspectors deduce the
warhead's contents.
The light
makes the nuclei of the
warhead's atoms vibrate.
Missiles carrying nuclear
warheads, for example, could be thrown off course if no allowance was
made for mountain ranges or valleys.
The arguments for the reliable replacement
warhead include, obviously, reliability, which is in the title of it, although that has somewhat been put to rest by expert study of the plutonium pets that rest at the center of a nuclear weapon; these are the key items for
making a nuclear explosion.
And that's what
makes the question of the reliable replacement
warhead so vexing, is that whether we need this new potentially more reliable replacement weapon or not depends on what your view is of what our nuclear posture should be and how we should maintain our nuclear weapons complex and all those kinds of thorny problems.
This option will include the capability to remanufacture the
warheads if corrosion and the like
make this necessary, so that the stockpile can remain as it is now.
In mid-2013, four federal nuclear safety experts brought an alarming message to the top official in charge of America's
warhead production: Los Alamos National Laboratory, the nation's sole site for
making and testing a key nuclear bomb part, wasn't taking needed safety precautions.
Anyway, there is much violence and blood shed, during the midst of which a twisted and disgruntled Russian music teacher
makes off with one of the
warheads and heads to New York to bomb the city.
To that end, Colossus (voiced by Stefan Kapicic) and Negasonic Teenage
Warhead (Brianna Hildebrand) are the only X-family members that
make an appearance save some hilarious cameos from Hugh Jackman.
Stefan Kapicic) and Negasonic Teenage
Warhead (Brianna Hildebrand) are the only X-family members that
make an appearance save some hilarious cameos from Hugh Jackman.
He
makes a team with fellow mutants called X-Force (comic - book readers will know something similar) with members like Domino, Negasonic Teenage
Warhead, Colossus and others.
The cynical yuks begin with the opening credits — the producers are called «some asshats» — and continue throughout a film that
makes merry about its tiny budget, which includes messing about with «C» - grade X-Men castoffs Colossus (Stefan Kapicic) and Negasonic Teenage
Warhead (Brianna Hildebrand).
We also have returning Colossus (voiced by Stefan Kapicic) and Negasonic Teenage
Warhead (Brianna Hildebrand) to
make his homecoming feel oh so sweet.
An extension of Fox's X-Men cinematic universe, Ryan Reynold's Deadpool teams up with two mutants out of that universe: Negasonic Teenage
Warhead, a texting and eye - rolling trainee at Xavier's School (played by Brianna Hildebrand), and Colossus, a Russian giant whose body is
made of unbreakable steel.
Deadpool rams a car, Colossus - style, Negasonic
Warhead (Brianna Hildebrand) remains abrasive as hell, and Zazie Beetz» Domino
makes a kick - ass entrance.
Negasonic Teenage
Warhead is confirmed to be
making an appearance in the highly anticipated Deadpool 2 alongside her X-Men mentor Colossus (Stefan Kapicic), who will undoubtedly continue to big - brother her relentlessly.
There's a desperate race to disable the boat's nuclear
warhead (in part by a character who's inexplicably claustrophobic, no less) while characters whose names we barely know must
make Important Decisions and obvious, foreshadowed shifts of fidelity unfold.
There is noticeably less Negasonic Teenage
Warhead this time around, which is a shame as she was a highlight of the first film, but Pool 2
makes up for this gap by providing a huge and fantastic supporting cast that are full of surprises and laughs themselves.
Will Deadpool, Domino (Zadie Beetz), Negasonic Teenage
Warhead (Brianna Hildebrand) and the rest of the X-Force have what it takes to
make their mission a success, or will they all end up blown to bits?
All of the supporting players perfectly compliment Deadpool though; Colossus is the perfect anti-thesis to the persona of Deadpool (the chemistry between the two
make for some absolutely hilarious moments juxtaposing the right way to be a superhero), while Brianna Hildebrand plays Negasonic Teenage
Warhead as a typical disinterested teenage girl that is essentially indifferent to her X-Men training.
X-Men's Colossus and Negasonic Teenage
Warhead make an appearance in the film to recruit Deadpool to their team of do gooders.
Military scientists and engineers designed ballistic missiles and liquid - fueled rockets, both of which were
made to carry
warheads longer distances than previously thought possible.
They travel at different speeds, and at as the game progresses develop new destructive abilities such as splitting and sending
warheads in different directions, and traveling in less predictable paths that
make them harder to shoot down.
After depositing the weapon, players will then have to
make it out of the city just as quickly as they entered it before the
warhead detonates.»
Your team must track down the party responsible for taking out another Ghost team and
making off with a nuclear
warhead in the process.
Finally, the «tech demo» detractors do have the right idea in one respect: Crysis
Warhead is gorgeous, declining to
make a statement with nontraditional rendering techniques and instead allowing the composition of its sprawling natural vistas to speak for itself.
Warhead 1991 Well, this is the simple, shareware (but full) version of
Warhead,
made by Brian C. Lowe and Eric Lee Steadle.
The specter this time isn't World War III, the Clock's longtime focus — disarmament treaties have slashed the numbers of nuclear
warheads to a fraction of their Cold War peak — but a raft of terrifying new threats that, in the Bulletin's estimation, more than
make up for the receding menace of nuclear holocaust.
I'm personally more worried about badly secured and aging stockpiles of nuclear
warheads than about active nuclear power plants, but an economic argument can be
made about these plants (many need huge subsidies, cost more than planned, etc).
It's a shame not to be able to crank the graphics up on this gorgeous game, but one doesn't expect to run Crysis:
Warhead — one of the most visually sophisticated shooters ever
made — at full steam without a pair of top - of - the - line cards and lots of speedy memory, which will jack up the cost of any machine to a couple grand or more.
The
Warhead's battery life and easy charging system
make it so you'll never need to worry about having enough juice to game with.